Yes, but it bounced off of that quickly, and has recovered to $83, which was a nice sign. I'm thinking we won't see quite as much volatility as the past two weeks until mid term elections results are clear, but I've been very wrong before.
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Interesting graph from Woodmac. Seems most companies can make due at $80/bbl with some cuts to exploration budget but at $60/bbl to $70/bbl things would get pretty ugly.
quote:Normally I'd say nothing ventured nothing gained, but right now I'd stay put, when oil gets above 90 and the futures are healthy, then maybe you jump.
I have a safe and stable job and no matter what happens to the economy I really have no worries about losing my job. With that being said, I have been here just over 3 yrs out of school which means falling behind on the pay scale. A move is necessary to get me back in line with some of my peers who have already made moves. I am not an engineer, so on the non-technical, business side of things. My past 3 years have been in a finance/strategy/planning role.
Being in Houston, the majority of jobs I am looking at and targeting are working for O&G companies, many of whom are listed on the chart referenced a couple posts above. I am mid-20's, married and have a 1 yr old daughter, hope to knock the wife up again in the next yr or less, so job stability is important but so is making more money.
How hesitant should I be or not be to make a move right now?
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A lot of older guys working for the majors are going to start retiring if/when interest rates start to increase because, from what I've heard talking to them, they are mostly all going to elect to take their pension as a lump sum and the decrease in that lump sum value due to higher interest rates will push them into making the decision to retire.
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POW I'm curious about your comment that no matter what happens to the economy you don't think your job is in jeopardy. I'm 57 so I've seen more than you, but I think in certain times everyone's job is in jeopardy.
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I keep seeing a recurring theme in this thread, the thought there is going to be a wave of retirees over the next 5 years. Do I think guys are going to exit the industry? Yep, but it's going to be when they are senile or forced out. A lot of these guys can't afford to retire.
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A lot of older guys working for the majors are going to start retiring if/when interest rates start to increase because, from what I've heard talking to them, they are mostly all going to elect to take their pension as a lump sum and the decrease in that lump sum value due to higher interest rates will push them into making the decision to retire.
I was under the impression the ability to cash out a pension at the majors was an unusual benefit. Is that with a traditional pension or a cash balance pension?
The reason I ask is I have the choice of pension, and if I choose the cash out plan it pays significantly less that if I choose the traditional pension
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POW I'm curious about your comment that no matter what happens to the economy you don't think your job is in jeopardy. I'm 57 so I've seen more than you, but I think in certain times everyone's job is in jeopardy.
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This is probably an uninformed opinion but don't the Saudis have reason to let prices go lower right now? The region is unstable and much of that instability is being financed by oil resources. Iran comes to mind.
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They can't handle lower prices so they will lower their output to make more money? You do realize that sounds pretty silly right? Before, this may have worked because there weren't many alternatives to close the gap. If they lower their output, we will close the gap eventually and push prices down again. Their only choice is to eliminate us.
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But smaller operators with more lopsided balance sheets face more uncertainty and tougher decisions:
Continue drilling and let their balance sheets suffer or pump the brakes and watch production growth fall.
And pinched in between are the oil field services companies, which will bear the brunt of the slump when operators pull back on work or start demanding concessions to loosen up tight margins, said Steven Wood of Moody's Investors Service